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My Transgender Life After Wesleyan | A Transphobic Experience in Philly

Started by Shana A, July 11, 2008, 01:00:29 PM

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Shana A

My Transgender Life After Wesleyan | A Transphobic Experience in Philly

Jean Pockrus
July 7, 2008

http://www.collegeotr.com/wesleyan_university/my_transgender_life_after_wesleyan_transphobia_9907

Yesterday I was violently, physically attacked by a group of transphobic teenagers, three black girls probably between the ages of 15 and 17 years old, in downtown Philadelphia. I was waiting for a bus on the corner as the three girls were walking across the street, staring at me and saying aloud to each other, "Is that a boy or a girl?" Then they began addressing me, "Are you a boy or a girl?" while looking down on me and laughing.

I did what I usually do in these transphobic situations when I'm taunted or stared at. I stared back. I stared back at the girls and said plainly, "It's rude to stare at people." (I also usually answer: "No, I'm not a boy or a girl," to that familiar question, "Are you a boy or a girl?" But I didn't say anything else this time.) One of their friends who was walking with them, a young man who looked about twenty, shouted, "Oh! That bitch said 'respect her.'" I thought the group was just going to continue walking on and leave me alone, but a few moments later one of the girls took a few sauntering steps towards me, smiling a little, and then pulled her arm back fast and punched me hard in the left side of my face.
"Be yourself; everyone else is already taken." Oscar Wilde


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NicholeW.

OMG!!! In our fair metropolis as well!! Well, some places there are better than others for being left alone in Philly. The gayborhood, South Street and Society Hill come to mind immediately. But if they were around Penn you get quite a mixture of folk, the accepting and the street-like children and others.

Just a guess that they weren't in Bryn Mawr. But, I know from experience that on Friday & Saturday nights there are a lot of cluster-gangs of late-teens and early teens that can make it a habit of harassing people in the Broad Street areas at hours that they should be home, or would be if they were mine, anyhow!. *sigh*

My heart goes out to them.

Nichole
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